The Supreme Court has struck out the appeals filed by Tonye
Cole and the Rivers chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC), challenging
the exclusion of the party from fielding candidates for the 2019 elections.
A Rivers state high court had nullified the candidacy of
Cole and Magnus Abe, who emerged governorship candidates of different factions
of the APC in Rivers.
The court also nullified all direct and indirect primaries
conducted by both factions of the APC in the state.
Cole enjoyed the support of Rotimi Amaechi, minister of
transportation, while Abe, senator representing Rivers south-east, kicked
against Amaechi’s choice of Cole.
Cole and his faction of the APC had lost all previous
attempts to get judgements in their favour at the federal high court and appeal
court.
But not relenting, they filled three appeals before the apex
court, challenging the judgment of the appellate court.
The suits listed the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the
Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and Abe as respondents.
At the hearing of the appeals on Thursday, Jibrin Okutepa,
counsel to the APC, argued that the court of appeal never affirmed the judgment
of the state high court nullifying its primaries.
He said the court only made a pronouncement that the appeals
were academic.
However, Emmanuel Ukala, counsel to PDP, told the court that
the notice of appeal filed by the APC was defective.
Delivering judgment on the case, a seven-man panel led by
Ibrahim Muhammad, held that three appeals were “defective, incompetent and
could not be heard by the court”
The judge said rather than the heading of the appeals to
read “Reliefs sought from the Supreme Court,” it was wrongly headed “Reliefs
sought from the Court of Appeal.”
Muhammad said the implication of the error was that the
appellant did not seek any relief from the apex court, and thereby contravened
the court’s rules, and rendering the appeal incompetent.
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